French Flavoring Ii: Two French Heroes

In the late 1700s, it was a Frenchman who, assisted by Indians, found the best route
between San Antonio and Santa Fe. He was commissioned in 1786 to do this by Domingo
Cabello, the Spanish governor of Texas, who lived in San Antonio. Pedro (Pierre) Vial
was well-known to the tribes of Texas all the way from Louisiana to the village of
the Taovayas near today’s Waco, Texas.

This was a region known also by another Frenchman with ties to San Antonio--the amazing
Paris-born Athanase de Mezieres, French military officer, trader with the Indians,
planter, and lieutenant-commander of the French post of Natchitoches, who was appointed
by the Spanish Crown to be the governor of Texas in 1779. He arrived in San Antonio,
but died before he could serve, and his remains lie within San Fernando Cathedral.

Pierre Vial, accompanied by a San Antonian named Cristobal de los Santos, set out
for Santa Fe on October 4, 1786. Visiting and consulting with friendly Indians along
the way, they went almost directly north, past the Brazos River Valley near today’s
Waco, and on to the Red River, then generally west to Santa Fe. Others were to follow
this route, making several changes.

A few years later, in 1789, Vial, along with Francisco Xavier Fragoso and some soldiers,
accomplished a remarkable exploration without the loss of a single man. He traveled
361 leagues from Santa Fe to Natchitoches, 51 more to Nacogdoches, 154 to San Antonio,
and 348 back to Santa Fe-- a total of 914 leagues, or approximately 2,295 miles. Remarking
about this extraordinary achievement, Texas historian Carlos E. Castaneda wrote:

He had visited many Indian pueblos in the vast area explored; he had made an accurate
map of the route to Natchitoches; he had found everywhere an abundance of wild game,
fruits, and nuts; and he had followed a route that was probably the shortest and most
practical in connecting all these points. The route was, in fact, followed subsequently.